CAMBRIDGE 
PUBLIC  LIBRARY 


A BIBLIOGRAPHY  OF 

THOMAS  WENTWORTH  HIGGINSON 


CAMBRIDGE,  MASSACHUSETTS 
DECEMBER,  1906 


J.  A,  CUMMINGS  PRINTING  CO. 
BOSTON 


Thomas  Wentworth  Higginson,  son  of  Stephen  and  Louisa 
(Storrow)  Higginson,  was  born  in  Cambridge,  Massachusetts, 
Dec.  22,  1823.  He  was  graduated  from  Harvard  College  in 
1841,  and  from  the  Harvard  Divinity  school  in  1847.  He 
became  pastor  of  a Unitarian  church  in  Newbury  port,  from 
1847-1850,  and  from  1852  to  1858  was  pastor  of  a Free  church 
in  Worcester.  His  name  was  prominently  identified  with  the 
anti-slavery  agitation,  and  at  the  outbreak  of  the  civil  war  he 
served  as  captain  of  the  51st  Massachusetts  regiment  of  volun- 
teers, and  later,  as  colonel  of  the  1st  South  Carolina  volun- 
teers, the  first  regiment  of  colored  troops  in  the  federal  ser- 
vice. Since  1878  he  has  resided  in  Cambridge,  and  has 
devoted  himself  to  literature,  education,  the  political  rights  of 
women,  and  to  public  affairs  in  general.  From  1889  to  1903 
he  was  a member  of  the  Board  of  Trustees  of  the  Cambridge 
Public  Library. 


This  bibliography  is  based  on  a note  book  of  Thomas 
Wentworth  Higginson,  and  is  compiled  by  Mrs.  Winifred 
Mather,  assistant  cataloguer  in  the  Cambridge  Public  Library, 
with  the  assistance  of  his  private  secretary,  Miss  Eva  G.  Moore. 

In  the  Chronological  list  the  place  in  parenthesis  under 
the  year  indicates  where  Higginson  resided  during  that  year. 

Def.  I,  II,  etc.,  after  a title  refers  to  the  volume  in  the 
Definitive  edition  (1900)  in  which  that  title  also  appears. 

When  an  article  has  been  published  later  both  in  a 
separate  volume  and  in  the  Definitive  edition  it  is  only 
referred  to  in  the  Definitive  edition. 

Order  of  arrangement  under  each  year : 

Books. 

Pamphlets,  leaflets,  broadsides. 

Books  or  pamphlets  written  with  others. 

Contributions  to  books. 

Contributions  to  periodicals. 

Editor,  translator,  compiler. 

Miscellaneous  articles,  book  notices, 
editorials  not  previously  listed. 


CHRONOLOGICAL  LIST. 


1843 

(Cambridge) 

A history.  [Poem.]  (In  Christian  examiner , Nov.)  Signed  H. 
Mrs.  Child’s  letters  from  New  York.  (In  the  Present , 
Nov.  15.) 

La  madonna  di  San  Sisto.  [Poem.]  (In  the  Present , Dec. 
15.)  Def.  YI. 

Same.  (In  Our  book . [A  Salem  fair  publication.]  Sept., 
1844.) 

Same.  (In  Longfellow.  Estray.  1846.) 

1845 

(Cambridge) 

Lay  of  the  humble.  [Poem.]  (In  N.  Y.  tribune , Oct.  i.) 
Tyrtaeus.  [Poem.]  (In  Harbinger , Nov.  i.) 

Same.  (In  Liberator , Nov.  7.) 

Articles.  (In  Christian  world , Jan.,  Peb.)  Signed  H. 

1846 

(Cambridge) 

Four  hymns.  (In  Longfellow  and  Johnson.  Book  of  hymns.) 
The  railroad.  [Poem.]  (In  Harbinger , Apr.  4.) 

Holiness  unto  the  Lord.  [Sonnet.]  (In  Harbinger , June  20.) 
Hymn  of  humanity.  (In  Harbinger , June  27.) 

Hebe.  [Poem.]  (In  Harbinger , July  4.) 


6 


A word  of  hope.  [Poem.]  (In  National  anti-slavery  standard, 
Sept.  3.) 

Sonnet  to  William  Lloyd  Garrison.  (In  Liberty  bell.) 

( Tr .)  A cradle  song,  from  the  German  of  Riickert.  (In 
Harbinger , July  4.) 

Same,  entitled  Nature’s  cradle  song.  Def.  VI. 

Two  articles  on  licentiousuess.  (In  Chronotype.) 

1847 

(Cambridge  — Newburyport) 

Hymn.  (In  Exercises  at  the  31st  annual  visitation  of  the 
Harvard  divinity  school , July  16.)  Pph.  Def.  VI. 
Ordination  exercises,  Sept.  15,  with  letter  about  ecclesiastical 
councils.  Pph. 

1848 

(Newburyport) 

Thanksgiving  sermon,  Newburyport,  Nov.  30.  Pph. 

Fugitives5  hymn.  (In  Liberty  bell.) 

1849 

(Newburyport) 

The  twofold  being.  [Poem.]  (In  Peabody,  Elizabeth  P.,  ed 
uEsthetic  papers.) 

1850 

(N  ewburyport) 

Address  to  the  voters  of  the  third  congressional  district  of 
Mass.  Pph. 

Birthday  in  fairyland.  Pph. 

Same.  (In  Phillips.  Laurel  leaves  for  little  folksf  1903.) 
The  tongue  : two  practical  sermons.  Pph. 


7 


( With  C.  Cushing  and  F.  L.  Dimmock.)  Address  to  the 
citizens  in  behalf  of  the  public  library  [Newbury port]. 
Broadside. 

1851 

(Newburyport) 

Merchants  : a Sunday  evening  lecture,  Jan.  Pph. 

Same.  (In  Hunt’s  merchants’  magazine , Oct.) 

Newbury  school  committee  report,  1850-51.  Pph. 

Newburyport  free  evening  school  report,  1851.  Pph. 

To  a young  convert.  [Poem.]  (In  Liberty  bell .) 

Same.  (In  his  Afternoon  landscape.  1889.) 

1852 

(Newburyport  — Worcester) 

Things  new  and  old:  an  installation  sermon,  Sept.  5.  Pph. 

Address  for  Freedom  club,  Worcester.  Broadside. 

Address  to  the  citizens  of  Worcester.  (Young  men’s  library 
association.)  Broadside. 

Elegy  without  fiction:  sermon,  Oct.  31,  suggested  by  the 
deaths  of  Webster  and  Rantoul.  Broadside. 

Man  and  nature.  (In  Christian  examiner , July.) 

(Tr.)  Forward.  [Poem],  from  the  German  of  Hoffman  von 
Fallersleben.  (In  Liberty  bell.)  Def.  VI. 

Same.  (In  Sword  and  pen,  Dec.  17.) 

1853 

(Worcester) 

Thalatta : a book  for  the  seaside. 

Ed.  anonymously  by  Higginson  and  Samuel  Longfellow.  Contains 
3 of  Higginson’s  poems. 

Address  on  the  operation  of  the  anti-liquor  law,  Boston, 
Jan  21.  (State  temperance  committee  report.)  Pph. 

Unitarian  autumnal  convention  : a sermon.  Pph. 


8 


Bemarks  before  the  constitutional  convention  on  the  qualifica- 
tion of  voters,  June  3.  Broadside. 

Am  I my  brother’s  keeper  ? sermon.  (In  Liberty  bell.) 

Conscience  in  the  counting  room.  (In  Hunt's  merchants' 
magazine , Jan.) 

Speech  at  anti-slavery  convention.  (In  Liberator , Feb.  11.) 

November;  December.  [Poems.]  (In  Putnam's  monthly 
’ magazine , Apr.)  December.  (In  his  Afternoon  land- 
scape. 1889.) 

Moral  results  of  slavery.  (In  Hunt's  merchants'  magazine, 
June.) 

The  lovers.  [Poem.]  (In  Putnam's  monthly  magazine , Sept.) 

Odensee.  (In  Putnam's  monthly  magazine , Nov.) 

Same.  (In  Longfellow,  ed.  Poems  of  places.) 

A day  in  Carter  notch.  (In  Putnam's  monthly  magazine , Dec.) 

Sermons  to  children.  (In  Sunday  school  gazette.) 

Speech  at  the  Legislative  temperance  society.  (In  Life  boat.) 

(JEJd.)  Whole  world’s  temperance  convention  report.  Pph. 

1854 

(Worcester) 

Does  slavery  Christianize  the  negro  ? (Anti-slavery  tract,  no.  4.) 

Massachusetts  in  mourning.:  a sermon  preached  in  Worcester, 
June  4.)  Pph. 

Scripture  idolatry  : a discourse.  Pph. 

Same.  (In  Liberator , Oct.  6.) 

Reprinted  in  London. 

Woman  and  her  wishes  : an  essay  inscribed  to  the  Mass,  con- 
stitutional convention.  Pph. 

Reprinted  in  London;  originally  written  for  TJna. 

Letter.  (In  Hartford  Bible  convention.  Proceedings. 
Appendix.) 

Sermon  on  the  Nebraska  bill.  (In  Liberator , Feb.  17.) 


9 


Speech  at  Abington,  Aug.  i : celebration  of  West  Indian  eman- 
cipation. (In  Liberator,  Aug.  n.) 

African  proverbial  philosophy.  (In  Putnam’s  monthly  maga- 
zine , Oct.) 


1855 

(Worcester  — Winter  in  Fayal) 

Worcester  school  committee  report,  Dec.  31,  1854. 

Speech  at  New  England  anti-slavery  convention.  (In  Libera- 
tor, June  8.) 

Anti-slavery  colporteurage.  (In  Liberator , Sept.  7.)  Signed  H. 
Speech  at  anniversary  of  Boston  mob  convention.  (In  Libera- 
tor, Nov.  2.) 

At  Fayal  began  a book,  the  Beturn  of  faith,  of  which  only  one 
chapter  was  afterwards  published  as  the  Sympathy  of  religions 

(1871). 


1856 

(Worcester  — Trip  to  Kansas) 

Speech  at  anniversary  of  West  Indian  convention.  (In 
Liberator , Aug.  8.) 

Going  to  Mt.  Katahdin.  (In  Putnam’s  monthly  magazine , 
Sept.) 

Written  in  the  name  of  one  of  the  ladies  of  the  party. 

Portugal’s  glory  and  decay.  (In  North  American  review , Oct.) 
Letters  from  Kansas  to  New  York  tribune . 

Published  later  as  an  anti-slavery  tract  (no.  20),  under  the  title 
A ride  through  Kanzas , and  also  published  independently. 

1857 

(Worcester) 

Speech.  (In  State  disunion  convention,  Worcester,  Jan.  15. 
Proceedings.')  Pph.  and  Broadside. 


10 


Statement  on  spiritual  manifestations,  Apr.  15.  Broadside. 
The  new  revolution  : a speech  before  the  American  anti-slavery 
society,  May  12.  Pph. 

Circular  letter,  July  8,  calling  for  state  disunion  convention. 
Leaflet. 

Call  for  a northern  convention  at  Cleveland,  Oct.  28-29. 
Leaflet. 


1858 

(Worcester) 

Woman  in  Christian  civilization  : N.  Y.  address.  (In  Religious 
aspects  of  the  age.  By  various  authors.) 

Saints  and  their  bodies.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Mar.)  Def.  VI. 
Speech  at  fifth  anniversary  of  the  N.  Y.  anti-slavery  society. 
(In  Liberator* May  28.) 

Mademoiselle’s  campaigns.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , July.) 
Def.  VII. 

Waterlilies.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Sept.)  Def.  VI. 

Physical  courage.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , ISTov.) 

Same.  (In  his  Outdoor  papers.  1863.) 

Romance  of  history.  (In  Liberty  bell.) 

{Comp,  with  Mrs.  Lucy  Stone.)  Woman’s  rights  almanac  for 
1858. 

1859 

(Worcester) 

The  rationale  of  spiritualism.  Pph. 

The  results  of  spiritualism  : a discourse,  N.  Y.,  Mar.  6.  Pph. 
Woman  and  the  alphabet.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Peb.) 
Def.  IV. 

Also  published  as  a tract  under  the  title  Ought  women  to  learn 
the  alphabet ? Boston,  1870,  and  Manchester,  Eng.,  1873. 

Letter  to  a dyspeptic.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Apr.) 

Same.  (In  his  Outdoor  papers.  1863.) 


11 


A charge  with  Prince  Rupert.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , June.) 
Def.  VII. 

Murder  of  the  innocents.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Sept.) 

Same.  (In  his  Outdoor  papers.  1863.) 


1860 

(Worcester) 

A visit  to  John  Brown’s  household  in  1859.  (In  Redpath. 

Public  life  of  Capt.  John  Brown .)  Def.  II. 

Maroons  of  Jamaica.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  Feb.) 

Same.  (In  his  Travellers  and  outlaws . 1889.) 

Maroons  of  Surinam.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  May.) 

Same.  (In  his  Travellers  and  outlaws.  1889.) 

Theodore  Parker.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  Oct.)  Def.  II. 

Fayal  and  the  Portuguese.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Nov.) 
Def.  VI. 

1861 

(Worcester) 

Barbarism  and  civilization.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  Jan.) 

Same.  (In  his  Outdoor  papers,  1863.) 

Gymnastics.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  Mar.) 

Same.  (In  his  Outdoor  papers.  1863.) 

April  days.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  Apr.)  Def.  VI. 

Denmark  Vesey.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  June.) 

Same.  (In  his  Travellers  and  outlaws.  1889.) 

Ordeal  by  battle.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  July.) 

Nat.  Turner’s  insurrection.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  Aug.) 

Same.  (In  his  Travellers  and  outlaws.  1889.) 

My  outdoor  study.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  Sept.) 

Same.  (In  his  Outdoor  papers.  1863.) 

A new  counterblast.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  Dec.) 

Same.  (In  his  Outdoor  papers.  1863.) 


12 


1862 

(Worcester  — Enlisted  in  September.) 

Worcester  public  library,  second  annual  report.  Pph. 

Snow.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Feb.)  Def.  VI. 

Letter  to  a young  contributor.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Apr.) 
Same.  (In  his  Atlantic  essays.  1871.) 

Same.  (In  his  Hints  on  writing  and  speech  making.  1887.) 
Health  of  our  girls.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , June.) 

Gabriel’s  defeat.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Sept.) 

Same.  (In  his  Travellers  and  outlaws.  1889.) 

Life  of  birds.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Sept.)  Def.  VI. 
Procession  of  the  flowers.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Dec.)  Def.  VI. 

1863 

(War) 

Outdoor  papers. 

A Puritan  minister.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Sept.) 

Same.  (In  his  Atlantic  essays.  1871.) 

1864 

(War  — Newport) 

Regular  and  volunteer  officers.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Sept.) 

A night  in  the  water.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Oct.)  Def.  III. 
Leaves  from  an  officer’s  journal.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Nov., 
Dec.) 

Book  notices.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Friend  of  progress.) 

1865 

(Newport) 

Leaves  from  an  officer’s  journal.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Jan.) 
Bequest  of  spiritualism.  (In  Friend  of  progress,  Feb.) 
Herbert  Spencer.  (In  Friend  of  progress,  Mar.) 


13 


Up  the  St.  Mary’s.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Apr.)  Def.  III. 
Fair  play  the  best  policy.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , May.) 
Frances  Power  Cobbe.  (In  Friend  of  progress,  July.) 

Up  the  St.  John’s.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Sept.)  Def.  III. 
Our  future  militia  system.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Sept.) 

(Tr.)  Works  of  Epictetus. 

Same.  Revised.  2 v.  1890. 

Same.  (In  Cambridge  classics .) 

Book  notices  and  editorials.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Common- 
wealth, Friend  of  progress,  Independent .) 

1866 

(Newport) 

Children’s  books  of  the  year.  (In  North  American  review, 
Jan.) 

( Ed .)  Harvard  memorial  biographies.  2 v. 

13  of  these  biographies  were  written  by  Higginson. 

Book  notices  and  editorials.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  Independent .) 

1867 

(Newport) 

Newport  free  public  library.  [Circular  calling  the  attention 
of  the  community  to  its  history,  needs,  etc.]  Pph. 
Nonsense  of  it.  Leaflet. 

Replies  to  arguments  against  woman  suffrage. 

A plea  for  culture.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  Jan.) 

Same.  (In  his  Atlantic  essays,  1871.) 

Charlotte  P.  Hawes.  (In  Radical,  Jan.) 

A driftwood  fire.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  Feb.)  Def.  Y. 

Out  on  picket.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Mar.)  Def.  III. 

The  haunted  window.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  Apr.) 

Same.  (In  his  Oldport  days.  1873.) 


14 


Oldport  in  winter.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , May.)  Def.  V. 
Negro  spirituals.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , June.)  Def.  III. 

An  artist’s  dream.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , July.) 

Reprinted  in  Def.  Y.  under  the  title  an  Artist's  creation. 

Up  the  Edisto.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Aug.)  Def.  III. 
Sunshine  and  Petrarch.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Sept.)  Def.  V. 
Literature  as  an  art.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Dec.) 

Same.  (In  his  Atlantic  essays.  1871.) 

Articles.  (In  Independent,  Nation .) 

1868 

(Newport) 

Newport  free  library,  president’s  report,  1867-68.  Pph. 
Lydia  Maria  Child ; Margaret  Fuller  Ossoli.  (In  Eminent 
women  of  the  age.  By  various  writers.) 

Oldport  wdiarves.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Jan.)  Def.  Y. 

The  pedigree  of  liberalism.  (In  Radical , Mar.) 

The  American  lecture  system.  (In  Macmillan’s  magazine , 
May.) 

Same.  (In  Littell’s  living  age , June  6.) 

{Adapted)  Child  pictures  from  Dickens. 

Book  notices  and  editorials.  (In  Independent.) 

The  book  notices  include  a series,  Live  Americans , giving 
accounts  of  Longfellow,  Lowell,  and  others. 

1869 

(Newport) 

Malbone. 

Same.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Jan.  - June.) 

Memoir  of  Dr.  Thaddeus  William  Harris.  Pph.  Def.  II. 
Reprinted  from  Harris's  Entomological  correspondence. 

Preface.  (In  Erckmann-Chatrian.  Mme.  There se.  Tr.  by 
C.  L.  Eortem.) 


15 


Immortality:  an  address,  [Boston],  Feb.  21,  1869.  (In 
Radical , Mar.) 

Greek  goddesses.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , July.)  Def.  VII. 

Tr.  into  French  in  the  Revue  britannique , Oct.,  1869,  and  also 
into  modern  Greek. 

Letters  to  country  boys.  (In  Hearth  and  home.) 

Book  notices  and  editorials.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Inde- 
pendent, N.  Y tribune .) 

1870 

(Newport) 

Army  life  in  a black  regiment.  Def.  III. 

Same.  Tr.  into  French  under  the  title  Vie  militaire  dans 
un  regiment  noir.  Paris,  1884. 

Decoration  day  address,  Mt.  Auburn,  May  30.  Broadside. 

Same.  (In  Peed  and  others , eds . Modern  eloquence, 
vol.  8.  1901.) 

Americanism  in  literature.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Jan.) 

Same.  (In  his  Atlantic  essays , 1871.) 

A shadow.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , July.)  Def.  VI. 

Footpaths.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Nov.)  Def.  VI. 

Our  menagerie.  (In  Our  young  folks.) 

Swimming.  (In  Atlantic  almanac.) 

Book  notices  and  editorials.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Independent , 
Index , N.  Y tribune , Woman’s  journal.) 

1871 

(Newport) 

Atlantic  essays. 

Madam  Delia’s  expectations.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Jan.) 

Same.  (In  his  Oldport  days.  1873.) 

The  sympathy  of  religions.  (In  Radical , Feb.)  Def.  VII. 

Published  as  a pamphlet,  Boston,  1871 ; reprinted,  London,  1872, 
and  Boston,  enlarged,  1876;  reprinted  in  Unity  church-door 
pulpit,  Chicago,  June  16,  1885  ; reprinted  in  World’s  parliament 


16 


of  religions,  vol.  Chicago,  I.,  1893;  tr.  under  the  title,  L'affin 
ite  des  religions , by  Mrs.  Maria  E.  MacKaye,  Paris,  1898. 

Plutarch’s  morals.  (In  Radical , Mar.) 

Unpublished  letters  from  Theodore  Parker.  (In  Radical , 
May.) 

Buddhist  path  of  virtue.  (In  Radical , June.) 

Sappho.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , July.)  Def.  VII. 

An  evening  with  Mrs.  Hawthorne.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , 
Oct.)  Def.  II. 

On  an  old  Latin  text  book.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Oct.) 
Def.  VII. 

Book  notice  of  Verses , by  “H.  H.”  (In  Atlantic  monthly . 
Decent  literature.) 

Editorials.  (In  Independent , Index , JY.  Y.  tribune  (including 
letters  from  Newport  and  from  Harvard  college), 
Woman's  journal. 

1872 

(Newport) 

A day  of  Scottish  games.  (In  Scribner's  monthly , Jan.) 

In  a wherry.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Eeb.)  Def.  V. 

Character  of  Buddha.  (In  Index , Mar.  16.) 

Hawthorne’s  last  bequest.  (In  Scribner's  monthly , Nov.) 

Editorials.  (In  Index , Woman's  journal.') 

1873 

(Newport) 

Oldport  days. 

Are  you  a Christian  ? Pph. 

Same.  (In  Index , Jan.  25.) 

Higher  education  of  woman : a paper  before  the  Social  science 
convention,  May  14.  Pph. 

Intercollegiate  scholarships.  (In  Scribner's  monthly , Jan.) 

Editorials.  (In  Index , Woman's  journal.) 


17 


1874 

(Newport) 

The  baby  of  the  regiment.  (In  Whittier,  comp.  Child  life  in 
prose. ) 

Reprinted  from  Army  life  in  a black  regiment.  1870. 

How  the  American  revolution  opened.  (In  Oliver  Optic7 s 
magazine. ) 

Same.  (In  Young  folks7  history  of  the  U.  S.  1875.) 
Charles  Dudley  Warner.  (In  Scribner7 s monthly , Jan.) 
Decoration.  [Poem.]  (I11  Scribner7 s monthly,  June.)  Def.  VI. 
Old  Dutch  times  in  New  York.  (In  St.  Nicholas , Sept.) 

Same.  (In  Young  folks7  history  of  the  U.  S.  1875.) 
Editorials.  (In  Independent , Woman7 s journal  A) 


1875 

(Newport) 

English  statesmen.  (Brief  biographies  of  European  public 
men  series.) 

Edited  the  3 other  volumes  in  this  series. 

Young  folks’  history  of  the  United  States. 

Tr.  into  French  (2  editions),  Paris,  1875;  inf o German,  Stuttgart, 
1876;  into  Italian,  1888. 

Life  of  Emerson.  (In  Johnson7 s universal  cyclopaedia .)  * 

The  word  philanthropy.  (In  Free  religious  association.  Free- 
dom and  fellowship  in  religion .)  Def.  YI. 

Introductory  address,  Free  religious  association.  Pph. 

The  gymnasium  and  gymnastics  in  Harvard  college.  (In  Vaille 
and  Clark,  comp.,  Harvard  book , vol.  2.) 


18 


1876 

(Newport) 

History  of  the  public  school  system  in  Ehode  Island.  (In 
History  of  public  education  in  It.  1 , 1636-1876. 

A moonglade.  (In  Laurel  leaves.  Pub.  by  W.  F.  Gill.)  Def.  V. 
Speech  at  memorial  service  for  Dr.  S.  G.  Howe.  (In  Howe, 
Mrs.  Julia  Ward.  Memoir  of  Dr.  Samuel  Gridley 
Howe.)  Def.  II. 

( With  Thomas  H.  Clarke.)  A sketch  of  the  public  schools  in 
the  city  of  Newport.  (In  History  of  public  education 
in  It.  I.) 

Childhood’s  fancies.  (In  Scribner’s  monthly , Jan.) 

Lowell’s  Among  my  books.  Second  series.  (In  Scribner’s 
monthly , Mar.  Culture  and  progress.) 

Story  of  the  signing.  [Declaration  of  independence.]  (In 
Scribner’s  monthly , July.) 

The  paper  Provenfal  song  mistakenly  attributed  to  Higginson  in 
Galaxy , Apr.,  was  by  Mrs.  Maria  E.  MacKaye. 

1877 

(Newport) 

[Education  in]  Ehode  Island.  (In  Kiddle  and  Schem.  Cyclo- 
paedia of  education. 

Intercollegiate  literary  association  report.  Pph. 

{Comp.)  Young  folks’  book  of  American  explorers. 

Book  notices  and  editorials.  (In  Nation , Woman’s  journal.) 

A portion  of  the  book  notices  in  the  Nation  were  called  Poetry  of 
the  month,  later  entitled  Kecent  poetry.  The  reviews  were 
continued  to  Feb.,  1904. 

1878 

(Cambridge — Trip  to  Europe) 

Speech  at  Conference  of  liberal  thinkers,  London,  June  13. 
Pph. 


19 


Letter  on  physical  and  intellectual  habits.  (In  Holbrook. 
Hygiene  of  the  brain  nerves .) 

B.  G.  White.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , May.  Contributors’  club.) 

Some  war  scenes  revisited.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , July.) 

Reprinted  in  Def.  Ill  under  the  title  Fourteen  years  after. 

Saxe  Holm’s  botany.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , July.  Contribu- 
tors’ club.) 

An  Irish  heart.  (In  Scribner’s  monthly , Dec.) 

Editorials.  ( In  Woman's  journal. ) 

1879 

(Cambridge,  from  this  time) 

Short  studies  of  American  authors. 

First  published  in  the  Literary  world. 

Intercollegiate  literary  association : its  history,  aims,  and 
results.  Pph. 

Speech  at  Frothingham  festival,  N.  Y.,  Apr.  22.  Pph. 

Joseph  Cook.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Mar.  Contributors’  club.) 

New  England  life.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , June.  Contributors’ 
club.) 

Eecent  essays.  (In  North  American  review , July.) 

Speech  at  Library  convention  in  Boston,  June-July.  (In 
Library  journal,  Sept.-Oct.) 

( With  others.)  Other  side  of  the  woman  question.  (In 
North  American  review,  Nov.) 

Editorials.  (In  Woman' s journal.) 

1880 

(In  Legislature) 

From  the  death  of  Winthrop  to  Philip’s  war;  French  and 
Indian  wars.  (In  Winsor,  ed.  Memorial  history  of 
Boston,  vol.  1 . ) 


20 


A revolutionary  congressman  on  horseback.  (In  Scribner’s 
monthly , Jan.) 

Same,  (fn  his  Travellers  and  outlaws , 1889.) 
Dwelling-places.  [Poem.]  (In  Scribner’s  monthly , Mar.) 
Def.  VI. 

The  reed  immortal.  [Poem.]  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Aug.) 
Def.  VI. 

Two  anti-slavery  leaders.  [William  Lloyd  Garrison  and  Levi 
Coffin.]  (In  International  review , Aug.) 

Howells’s  Undiscovered  country . (In  Scribner’s  monthly , Sept.) 
A search  for  the  Pleiades.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Nov.) 
Def.  VI. 

Editorials.  (In  Harvard  register,  Woman’s  journal.) 

1881 

Common-sense  about  women. 

Eeprinted  in  London,  1890,  4th  ed.,  with  some  omissions.  Tr. 
into  German  from  the  English  ed.  under  the  title  Die  frauen- 
frage  und  der  gesunde  mens chenver stand,  by  Eugenie  Jacobi, 
1895. 

Young  folks’  history  of  the  United  States.  2d  ed. 

Printed  in  raised  type  by  the  Howe  memorial  press,  Perkins 
institution  and  Mass,  school  for  the  blind. 

Address  at  the  celebration  of  the  battle  of  Cowpens,  Spartan- 
burg, S.  C.,  May  11.  Pph. 

Same.  (In  Heed  and  others , eds.  Modern  eloquence,  vol.  8. 
I9OT0 

Oration.  (In  Exercises  in  celebrating  the  250th  anniversary  of 
the  settlement  of  Cambridge , Dec.  28,  1880.) 

French  radical  eloquence.  (In  Heed,  ed.  The  city  and  the 
sea , with  other  Cambridge  contributions  in  aid  of  the 
hospital  fund. 

Memorial  ode  [May  30].  (With  Long’s  Oration.)  Pph. 
Def.  VI. 

Also  printed  separately. 


21 


Notice  of  Benjamin  Peirce.  (In  King,  comp.  Memorial 
collection. ) 

Carlyle’s  laugh.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  Oct.) 

Sellar’s  Roman  poets  of  the  republic.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , 
Oct.) 

Short  march  with  the  guard.  [Verses.]  (In  Sword  and  pen , 
Dec.  9.) 

Book  notices  and  editorials.  (In  Christian  register,  Literary 
world,  Woman's  journal.) 

1882 

Young  folks’  history  of  the  United  States.  New  ed.,  with 
additional  chapters. 

Speech  at  Rev.  Samuel  Johnson’s  funeral.  (In  Samuel  John 
son  : a memorial .)  Pph. 

( With  others.)  Testimony  on  Charles  river  railroad,  Feb. 
13.  Pph. 

The  Brook  farm  period.  (In  Demoresfs  monthly,  July.) 

First  Americans.  (In  Harper's  monthly  magazine,  Aug.) 

Visit  of  the  vikings.  (In  Harper's  monthly  magazine,  Sept. ) 

Spanish  discoverers.  (In  Harper's  monthly  magazine,  Oct.) 

The  last  three  articles  were  published  later  in  Higginson’s  Larger 
history  of  the  United  States  (1885),  and  in  Higginson  and 
MacDonald’s  History  of  the  United  States  (1905). 

The  baby  sorceress.  [Sonnet.]  (In  Century  magazine , Nov.) 
Def.  VI. 

Editorials  and  other  articles.  (In  Index,  Nation , Woman's 
journal .) 

1883 

Dedicatory  address  at  unveiling  of  the  statue  of  John  Bridge, 
Sept.  20,  1882.  (In  Cambridge  city  document,  1883.) 

Why  do  children  dislike  history?  (In  Methods  of  teaching 
history.  Hall’s  pedagogical  library,  vol.  1.) 

Report  on  the  Parker  library.  (In  Boston  public  library. 
jist  annual  report.)  Pph. 


22 


Old  English  seamen.  (In  Harper's  monthly  magazine , Jan.) 

French  voyageurs.  (In  Harper's  monthly  magazine , Mar.) 

Negro  race  in  America.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Apr.) 

Conway’s  Emerson  at  home  and  abroad.  (In  Century  magazine , 
Apr.) 

“An  English  nation.”  (In  Harper's  monthly  magazine , Apr.) 

The  hundred  years’  war.  (In  Harper's  monthly  magazine , 
June.) 

Second  generation  of  English  in  America.  (In  Harper's 
monthly  magazine , July.) 

The  British  yoke.  (In  Harper's  monthly  magazine , Aug.) 

Dawning  of  independence.  (In  Harper's  monthly  magazine , 
Oct.) 

The  foregoing  articles  in  Harper's  magazine  were  published  later 
in  Higginson’s  Larger  history  of  the  United  States  (1885),  and 
in  Higginson  and  MacDonald’s  History  of  the  United  States , 
(I9°S)* 

Lodge’s  Webster.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  Oct.) 

Book  notices  and  articles.  (In  Nation .) 

1884 

[Life  of]  Margaret  Fuller  Ossoli. 

Wendell  Phillips.  Pph.  Def.  II. 

Reprinted  from  the  Nation , Feb.  7,  1884. 

Young  men’s  party.  Pph. 

Reprinted  from  the  N.  Y.  evening  post , Oct.  4,  1884. 

Palmer’s  Odyssey.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Oct.) 

1885 

Larger  history  of  the  United  States. 

Oration.  (In  Memorial  services  in  the  city  of  Cambridge  on 
the  day  of  the  funeral  of  General  Grant , Aug.  8 .)  Pph. 

Hawthorne’s  Nathaniel  Hawthorne  and  his  wife.  (In  Atlantic 
monthly , Feb.) 


23 


American  flash  language  in  1793.  (In  Science , May  8.) 

Lowell  in  England.  (In  Literary  ivorld,  June  27.) 

“ H.  H.”  (In  Critic , Aug.  22.) 

Mrs.  Helen  Jackson,  “H.  H.”  (In  Century  magazine , Dec.) 
Def.  II. 

Began  a series  of  articles,  entitled  Women  and  men,  in  Harper's  bazar . 

1886 

The  monarch  of  dreams.  Def.  Y. 

“A  German  translation  of  this  story  appeared  in  the  New  York 
Freie  zeitung  of  Aug.  18,  1889,  the  translator  being  Louis 
Wagele  and  the  title  Her  monarch  seiner  traume.  It  is  said  to 
have  also  appeared  in  French,  but  no  particulars  are  known.” 

William  Lloyd  Garrison.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  Jan.)  Def.  II. 

Grant.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  Mar.,  Sept.)  Def.  II. 

How  I was  educated.  (In  Forum,  Apr.) 

Same.  Pph. 

To  the  memory  of  “ H.  H.”  [Sonnet.]  (In  Century  magazine, 
May.)  Def.  YI. 

Eeminiscences  of  Helen  Jackson.  (In  New  Frinceton  review, 
July.) 

Old  Salem  sea-captains.  (In  Harper's  monthly  magazine, 
Sept.) 

Same.  (In  his  Travellers  and  outlaws.  1889.) 

E.  P.  Whipple.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  Sept.) 

Same.  (In  his  Short  studies  of  American  authors.) 

Mr.  Hamerton  on  literature  in  a republic.  (In  Harvard 
monthly,  Dec.) 

Articles.  (In  Critic,  Independent,  Good  cheer,  Harper's  bazar, 
Nation.) 

1887 

Hints  on  writing  and  speech  making. 

Women  and  men. 

Reprinted  from  Harper's  bazar . 


24 


For  self-respect  and  self-protection : speech  at  the  annual  meet- 
ing of  the  American  woman  suffrage  association,  Phila., 
Nov.  i.  Pph.  and  leaflet. 

Life  of  John  Brown.  (In  Appleton's  cyclopaedia  of  American 
biography , vol.  i.) 

Preface.  (In  Stevens.  Around  the  world  on  a bicycle .) 

Speeches,  letters,  etc.  1853-1887.  (In  Stanton  and  others , 
eds.  History  of  woman  suffrage . 4 v.) 

Unsolved  problems  in  woman  suffrage.  (In  Forum , Jan.) 

Reprinted  later  as  a pamphlet. 

Mr.  Hamerton  on  literature  in  a republic.  (In  Harvard 
monthly , Jan.) 

Hayne,  Paul  Hamilton.  (In  Chautauquan , Jan.) 

Lanier,  Sidney.  (In  Chautauquan , Apr.) 

A missent  letter.  (In  Strawbridge  and  Clothier's  quarterly , 
vol.  6,  no.  2.  Summer  no.) 

Same.  (In  Woman's  journal , Aug.  27.) 

Sub  pondere  crescit.  [Sonnet.]  (In  Century  magazine , Sept.) 
Def.  VI. 

Articles.  (In  Harper's  bazar , Independent .) 

1888 

Short  studies  of  American  authors.  Rev.  and  enl. 

Address.  (In  Reunion  of  the  free  soilers  of  184.8-1852 , Bos- 
ton, June  28.)  Pph. 

English  sources  of  American  dialect.  (In  American  anti- 
quarian society.  Proceedings.  New  series,  vol.  4.) 

Howells’s  Modern  Italian  poets.  (In  Nation , Jan.  5.) 

A precursor  of  Hawthorne  [William  Austin].  (In  Independent. 
Mar.  29.) 

English  and  American  manners.  (In  Forum , J uly.) 

1889 

The  afternoon  landscape  : poems  and  translations. 

Travellers  and  outlaws. 


25 


Three  outdoor  papers.  (Riverside  literature  series.)  Pph. 
Lowell  in  Cambridge.  (In  Critic , Feb.  23.) 

Yestis  angelica.  [Poem.]  (In  Scribner’s  magazine , Mar.) 
Def.  VI. 

Nils’s  garden.  [A  story.]  (In  Century  magazine , July.) 

Ode  to  a butterfly.  [Poem.]  (In  Century  magazine , Hov.) 
Def.  YI. 

1890 

In  a fair  country : essays  from  Outdoor  papers.  Illustrated 
by  Irene  E.  Jerome. 

Cambridge  public  library : plan  reported  to  the  Book  com- 
mittee. Pph. 

Cambridge  : Literature.  (In  Hurd,  comp.  History  of  Middlesex 
county , vol.  1.) 

Opening  address.  (In  Browning  society  of  Boston.  Memorial 
to  Robert  Browning , Jan.  28.) 

A world  literature.  (In  Century  magazine , Jan.) 

Letter  relating  to  the  Cambridge  public  library.  (In  Cam- 
bridge tribune , Mar.  15.) 

Richard  Henry  Dana.  (In  Cambridge  tribune , Dec.  20.) 

{Ed.  with  Mrs.  Ellen  H.  Bigelow.)  American  sonnets.  Preface, 
by  Higginson. 

{Ed.  with  Mrs.  Mabel  L.  Todd.)  Poems,  by  Emily  Dickinson. 
Preface,  by  Higginson. 

1891 

Life  of  Francis  Higginson. 

On  the  steps  of  the  hall  (University  hall,  Aug.  28,  1837). 
Privately  printed.  Leaflet. 

Poem  inscribed  to  the  class  of  1841,  Harvard  university. 

Address  at  the  100th  anniversary,  Jan.  24.  (In  Massachusetts 
historical  society.  Proceedings.) 

Rabiah’s  defense.  [Poem.]  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Sept.) 
Def.  YI. 

Emily  Dickinson’s  letters.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Oct.) 


26 


The  two  lessons.  [Sonnet.]  (In  Century  magazine , Dec.) 
Def.  VI. 

Glimpses  of  authors.  (In  Brains , Oct.  15- Jan.  1,  1892.) 

(Ed.  with  Mrs.  Mabel  L.  Todd.)  Poems,  by  Emily  Dickinson. 
2d  series. 

(Ed.  in  part.)  The  Eindge  gifts  to  Cambridge.  [City 
publication.] 

Articles.  (In  Harper’s  bazar , Independent .) 

1892 

Concerning  all  of  us. 

The  new  world  and  the  new  book  : an  address  delivered  before 
the  nineteenth  century  club  of  N.  Y.  city,  Jan.  15, 1891, 
with  kindred  essays. 

Literature  in  a republic  : a lecture.  (In  Eeed  and  others , eds. 
Modern  eloquence , vol.  5.) 

Tribute  to  Lowell.  (In  Massachusetts  commandery  of  the 
Loyal  legion.  In  memoriam.)  Pph. 

Same.  (In  Cambridge  tribune , Feb.  20.) 

Youth  and  literary  life.  (In  Lectures  to  young  men , N.  Y.) 
Pph. 

English  ancestry  of  the  Higginson  family.  (In  New  England 
historical  and  genealogical  register , Apr.) 

An  Egyptian  banquet.  [Sonnet.]  (In  Scribner’s  magazine , 
Apr.)  Def.  VI. 

The  sleeping  car.  [Poem.]  (In  Century  magazine , May.) 
Def.  YI. 

School,  college,  library.  (In  Cosmopolitan  magazine , May.) 
A world  outside  of  science.  (In  New  world , Dec.) 

Same.  Pph. 

Same.  (In  his  Book  and  heart , 1897.) 

(With  Mrs.  Florence  W.  Jaques.)  List  of  battles  and  casual- 
ties of  Massachusetts  regiments  during  the  war  of  the 
rebellion.  (In  New  England  historical  and  genealogi- 
cal register , Jan.) 

Articles.  (In  Nation .) 


27 


1893 

Cambridge  public  library  report.  Pph. 

Straight  lines  or  oblique  lines  ? (In  Woman  suffrage  leaflet , 
Nov.) 

(With  Mrs.  Mary  T.  Higginson.)  Such  as  they  are:  poems. 

(With  Edward  Channing.)  English  history  for  American 
readers. 

Speech  on  the  turning  point  in  the  history  of  the  parliament 
of  religions.  (In  World’s  parliament  of  religions,  vol.  i.) 

Articles.  (In  Boston  evening  transcript , Nation , Fublie  opinion .) 

1894 

Cambridge  public  library  report.  Pph. 

Note  [to]  Books  and  reading , by  Sir  John  Lubbock.  (In 
Woman’s  book,  vol.  2.) 

Introduction.  (In  Speeches  and  addresses  of  William  E. 
Russell . ) 

How  to  use  a public  library.  (In  Golden  rule , Sept.  27.) 

How  to  read  magazines.  (In  Golden  rule , Nov.  15.) 

1895 

Massachusetts  in  the  army  and  navy  during  the  war  of 
1861-65.  Vol.  2- 

The  fairy  coursers.  [Poem.]  (In  Cambridge  sketches , by 
Cambridge  authors.) 

The  woman  who  most  influenced  me.  (In  Ladies’  home  journal, 
Oct.) 

A young  girl's  library.  (In  Ladies’  home  journal,  Nov.) 

Articles.  (In  Boston  evening  transcript , Harper’s  bazar,  Nation, 
et  al.) 

1896 

Massachusetts  in  the  army  and  navy  during  the  war  of 
1861-65.  Vol.  1. 


28 


Prefatory  note.  (In  Aspinwall.  Short  stories  for  short  people.) 

The  school  of  jingoes.  (In  Essays  from  the  Chap-book.) 

Life  in  Cambridge  town.  (In  Gilman,  ed.  Cambridge  of  1896  ) 

Octavius  Brooks  Frothingham.  (In  New  world , Mar.) 

A Keats  ms.  (In  Forum , June.) 

Same.  (In  his  Book  and  heart , 1897.) 

The  romance  of  a brown-paper  parcel.  (In  Century  magazine, 
Aug.) . 

A bookshelf  in  the  kitchen.  (In  Ladies’  home  journal,  Nov.) 

Cheerful  yesterdays.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  Nov.  - Dec.) 
Def.  I. 

{Comp.)  Bough  list  in  ms.  of  his  Galatea  collection  of  books 
in  the  Boston  public  library  relating  to  women.  With 
newspaper  scraps,  printed  titles,  and  a supplementary 
accessions  catalogue. 

A comment  on  the  Galatea  collection  may  be  found  in  the 
Boston  evening  transcript,  Feb.  18,  1896. 

{Comp.)  Scrap-book  of  periodical  articles,  newspaper  cut- 
tings, and  portraits  relating  to  James  Bussell  Lowell. 

Presented  to  the  Cambridge  public  library,  1896. 

Articles.  (In  Boston  evening  transcript,  Harper’s  bazar, 
Harper’s  weekly,  Independent , Nation,  Outlook,  Youth’s 
companion,  et  all) 


1897 

Book  and  heart. 

Procession  of  the  flowers,  and  kindred  papers.  Def.  VI. 

The  biography  of  Browning’s  fame.  (In  Browning  society  of 
Boston.  Papers.) 

Educational  conditions  and  problems.  [Speech  at  the  annual 
meeting  of  the  Harvard  teachers  association,  Mar.  6.] 

(In  Educational  review,  May.) 

Cheerful  yesterdays.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  Jan.  - May.) 
Def.  I. 


29 


Gottingen  and  Harvard  eighty  years  ago.  (In  Harvard  grad- 
uates' magazine , Sept.) 

Literary  London  twenty  years  ago.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , 
Dec.) 

Articles.  (In  Nation ) et  al.) 


1898. 

Cheerful  yesterdays.  Def.  I. 

Cambridge  public  library  report.  Pph. 

Tales  of  the  enchanted  islands  of  the  Atlantic. 

( With  Edward  Channing.)  English  history  for  Americans. 
New  edition  of  their  English  history  for  American  readers.  1893. 

[Sketches  of]  Brown,  Cooper,  and  Thoreau.  (In  Carpenter, 

ed.  American  prosed) 

Literary  Paris  twenty  years  ago.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Jan.) 
On  the  outskirts  of  public  life.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Feb.) 
Articles.  (In  Nation , Outlook , et  al.) 


1899. 

Contemporaries.  Def.  II. 

Old  Cambridge. 

Save  the  republic.  (Anti-imperialist  leaflet,  no.  19.) 

Reprinted  from  Harper' s bazar,  Aug.  12,  1899. 

( With  William  Taggard  Piper.)  Cambridge  public  library 
report.  Pph. 

Harriet  Beecher  Stowe.  [Preface.]  (In  Stowe.  TJncle  Tom's 
cabin.  Hew  ed.) 

Wendell  Phillips.  (In  Encyclopcedia  Britannica.) 

His  brother’s  brother  [John  Holmes].  (In  Atlantic  monthly , 
Aug.) 

The  road  to  England.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Oct.) 

Articles.  (In  Nation , Outlook , et  al.) 


30 


1900. 

[Writings.  Definitive  ed.]  7 v. 

Vol.  I.  Cheerful  yesterdays. 

Chapters  first  printed  in  the  Atlantic  monthly . 

2 . Contemporaries. 

Most  of  the  sketches  previously  printed. 

3.  Army  life  in  a black  regiment. 

Previously  printed. 

4.  Women  and  the  alphabet. 

Chiefly  articles  printed  in  Harper's  bazar. 

5.  Studies  in  romance. 

Includes  Malbone. — The  monarch  of  dreams.  — Oldport  days 
[part  of], 

6.  Outdoor  studies. 

Mostly  previously  printed  essays  and  poems. 

7.  Studies  in  history  and  letters. 

Most  of  these  previously  printed. 

The  alliance  between  Pilgrim  and  Puritan  in  Massachusetts : 
an  address  delivered  before  the  Old  planters’  society, 
Salem,  June  9,  1900.  Pph. 

Seasons  for  voting  for  Bryan.  Leaflet. 

Reprinted  from  the  Springfield  daily  republican , Sept.,  1900. 

( With  W.  L.  Garrison  and  G.  S.  Boutwell.)  How  should  a 
colored  man  vote  in  1900?  Leaflet. 

Reprinted  from  the  Boston  herald,  Oct.  11,  1900. 

The  reoccupation  of  Jacksonville  in  1893.  (In  Mass,  com- 
mandery  of  the  Loyal  legion.  Civil  ivar  papers,  vol.  2.) 
Addresses  and  remarks.  (In  Free  religious  association.  Pro- 
ceedings, 1867-1900.) 


31 


Education  and  the  public  library.  [Typewritten.]  (Boston 
public  library.  Eree  lectures,  1900.) 

Articles.  (In  Independent,  Outlook.) 

1901 

American  orators  and  oratory  : being  a report  of  lectures 
delivered  at  Western  Beserve  university. 

The  edition  is  limited  to  500  copies. 

( With  William  J.  Bolfe.)  Cambridge  public  librarv  report. 
Pph. 

Childe  Boland  to  the  dark  tower  came.  (In  Poet-lore,  Apr.- 
June.) 

Articles.  (In  Boston  evening  transcript,  Independent , Outlook, 
et  al.) 

1902 

[Life  of]  Henry  Wadsworth  Longfellow. 

[Life  of]  John  Greenleaf  Whittier. 

Horace  Elisha  Scudder : a memorial.  (In  American  academy 
of  arts  and  sciences.  Proceedings .)  Pph. 

Speech  at  Winchester,  Eng.,  Sept.  18,  1901.  In  Bowker. 

King  Alfred's  millenary .) 

(Ed.)  Story  without  an  end.  By  E.  W.  Carove ; tr.  by 
Sarah  Austin.  Preface  by  Higginson. 

(Ed.)  Walks  with  Ellery  Channing.  [Extracts  from  ms. 
diaries  of  Balph  Waldo  Emerson.  Introduction  by 
Higginson.]  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  July.) 

Articles.  (In  Independent , Outlook.) 

1903 

James  Elliot  Cabot:  a memorial.  (In  American  academy  of 
arts  and  sciences.  Proceedings.)  Pph. 

(With  Mrs.  Margaret  Higginson  Barney.)  [Papers.]  (In 

Heath  readers .) 


32 


( With  Henry  Walcott  Boynton.  Reader’s  history  of  Ameri- 
can literature. 

Based  upon  a course  of  lectures  “American  literature  in  the  nine- 
teenth century  ” given  by  Higginson  at  the  Lowell  institute, 
Boston,  1903.  They  were  reported  in  part  in  the  Boston 
evening  transcript  under  the  following  titles  and  dates : 

American  literature,  Jan.  6 ; The  Philadelphia  period,  Jan.  9 ; 

Irving  and  Cooper,  Jan.  13;  Boston  takes  the  lead,  Jan.  16; 

Concord  litterateurs,  Jan.  20;  Influence  of  the  South,  Jan. 

23;  Writers  from  the  West,  Jan.  27;  Our  literary  obstacles, 

Jan.  30. 

Address.  (In  Centenary  of  the  birth  of  Ralph  Waldo  Emer- 
sonConcord , May  25.) 

(Tr.)  Fifteen  sonnets  of  Petrarch. 

The  introduction  is  based  essentially  upon  Sunshine  and  Petrarch 
(1867)  which  originally  included  most  of  the  sonnets  in  this 
volume.  This  edition  consists  of  430  numbered  copies. 

Articles.  (In  Christian  endeavor  ivorld , Independent , Outlook > 
Success.) 


1904 

Address  on  Decoration  day  in  Sanders  theatre  [Cambridge!, 
May  30.  Pph. 

The  sunny  side  of  the  transcendental  period.  (In  Atlantic 
monthly , Jan.) 

English  and  American  cousins.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Feb.) 

Books  unread.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Mar.) 

Aristocracy  of  the  dollar.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Apr.) 

Intensely  human.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , May.) 

Butterflies  and  poetry.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , June.) 

Articles.  (In  Boston  evening  transcript , Encyclopedia  Ameri- 
cana, Nation , Outlook , The  reader , Sunday  magazine } 
[ Wanamaker’s]  Book  news.) 


33 


1905 

Part  of  a man’s  life. 

George  Erisbie  Hoar.  (In  American  academy  of  arts  and 
sciences.  Proceedings?)  Pph. 

Letter  relating  to  the  Intercollegiate  socialist  society.  Leaflet. 

Beprinted  from  Harper's  weekly , July  14. 

( With  William  MacDonald.)  History  of  the  United  States. 

Enlarged  ed.  of  Higginson’s  Larger  history  of  the  U.  S. 

Introduction.  (In  Capen.  Country  homes  of  famous  Americans .) 

Introduction.  (In  Sinclair.  The  aftermath  of  slavery?) 

American  audiences.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Jan.)  . 

The  close  of  the  Victorian  epoch.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Mar.) 

English  literature  in  the  last  half  of  the  nineteenth  century : 
lectures  delivered  at  the  Lowell  institute,  Boston,  1905. 

Not  published,  but  reported  in  part  in  the  Boston  evening  tran- 
script  under  the  following  titles  and  dates : 

A few  English  poets,  Mar.  1 ; Carlyle,  Froude,  Kuskin,  Mar. 
8;  Darwin’s  domesticity,  Mar.  15;  Landor  and  his  class, 
Mar.  22 ; Decent  English  letters,  Mar.  29 ; Browning  and 
Tennyson,  Apr.  5. 

Letters  of  mark.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Apr.) 

Wordsworthshire.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , July.) 

William  James  Bolfe.  (I11  Outlook , July  22.) 

Literature  as  a pursuit ; an  address  before  the  Harvard  ethical 
society,  Cambridge,  Mass.  (In  Critic , Aug.) 

History  in  easy  lessons.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Sept.) 

The  cowardice  of  culture.  (In  Atlantic  monthly , Oct.) 

The  above  six  papers  in  the  Atlantic  monthly  together  with  the 
six  published  in  the  same  periodical  for  1904  form  the  volume 
“Part  of  a man’s  life.” 

(Ed.)  The  Hawthorne  centenary  celebration  at  the  Wayside, 
Concord,  Mass.,  July  4-7,  1904. 

Contains  Higginson’s  address,  July  4,  as  presiding  officer  of  that 
day. 


34 


Articles.  (In  Christian  endeavor  world , Critic , Independent , 
Nation , Outlook . 

1906 

Introduction.  (In  Braithwaite,  Book  of  Elizabethan  verse.) 
A great  poet  in  her  prime  : Elizabeth  Barrett  Browning.  (In 
[ Wanamaker>s~\  Book  news , Mar.) 

A reunited  Anglo-Saxondom.  (In  Critic , Apr.) 

“Gentlemen  by  profession.”  (In  Independent , Apr.  12.) 

( others .)  The  creative  spirit  in  literature.  (In  Outlook , 

Nov.  24.) 


BOOKS  AND  ARTICLES  ABOUT  HIGGINSON. 


Ammidon.  Thomas  Wentworth  Higginson.  (In  New  England 
magazine , Oct.  1888.) 

Andrews.  Poem  to  Col.  Higginson.  (In  Christian  register , 
Dec.  24,  1903.) 

Bid  well.  Thomas  Wentworth  Higginson.  (In  Eclectic  maga- 
zine, May,  1877.) 

Blanc.  Un  americain  representatif.  (In  Questions  ameri- 
caines .) 

Same.  (In  Revue  des  deux  mondes , June  1,  1901.) 

Same.  A typical  American.  Tr.  by  E.  M.  Waller.  1902. 

Bolton.  Thomas  Wentworth  Higginson.  (In  American 
authors  [1887].  ) 

Boston  evening  transcript,  Dec.  22,  1898.  Col.  Higginson’s 

75  Jears- 

Dec.  22,  1904.  Col.  Higginson  at  81. 

Boston  herald,  Deo.  23,  1901.  Col.  Thomas  Wentworth 
Higginson,  78  years  of  age. 

Boston  Sunday  herald,  Dec.  20,  1903.  Col.  Thomas  Went- 
worth Higginson  at  four-score. 

Butterworth.  Old  age  of  New  England  authors.  [Notice 
and  portrait  of  Col.  Higginson.]  (In  Review  of  reviews, 
American,  Dec.  1900.) 

Cambridge  chronicle,  Eeb.  28,  1880.  Warning  to  Col. 
Higginson. 

Editorial  at  the  time  Higginson  was  running  for  the  legislature  in 
opposition  to  Muzzey. 

Dec.  26,  1903.  Eighty  years  old. 

Cambridge  tribune,  Dec.  26,  1903.  Fourscore  years. 


36 


Apr.  2,  1904.  Reception  to  Col.  Higginson  by  Camp 

56,  G.  A.  R. 

Cooke.  The  Emerson  centennial.  [Notice  and  portrait  of 
Col.  Higginson.]  (In  New  England  magazine , May, 
I9°3*) 

— Free  religious  association.)  In  New  England  maga- 

zine , June,  1903.) 

Contains  notices  and  a portrait  of  Higginson. 

Old  times  and  new  in  Dublin,  N.  H.  (In  New  Eng- 
land magazine , Aug.,  1899.) 

— — — Thomas  Wentworth  Higginson  at  Cambridge.  (In 
Gilder,  ed.  Authors  at.  home  [1888].  ) 

Unitarianism  in  America.  1902. 

Contains  references  to  Higginson. 

Crawford.  Summer  vacation  colonies  : Thomas  Wentworth 
Higginson.  (In  New  England  home  magazine , supp,  to 
Boston  Sunday  journal,  July  8,  1900.) 

Same.  Boston’s  dean  in  his  summer  home.  (In  National 
magazine,  Aug.,  1902.) 

Current  literature,  Sept.,  1900.  Col.  Thomas  Wentworth 
Higginson.  (General  gossip  of  authors  and  writers.) 

Dutoit.  An  American  reformer  : an  extract  tr.  from  JJn  beau 
moment  de  la  vie  americaine  in  La  liberte  chretienne , 
Jan.  14,  1906.  (In  Boston  evening  transcript , Oct.  16, 
1906.) 

Foley.  [Bibliography  of  T.  W.  Higginson  ] (In  American 
authors,  1795-1895.) 

Frothingham.  [Higginson  a transcendentalism]  (In  Trans- 
cendentalism in  New  England.  1886.) 

Grant.  Verses  to  Col.  Thomas  Wentworth  Higginson  on  his 
80th  birthday.  (In  Atlantic  monthly,  Feb.,  1904.) 

Halsey.  Thomas  Wentworth  Higginson  in  Cambridge,  Mass. 
(In  American  authors  and  their  homes . 1901.) 


37 


Hart.  Slavery  and  abolition.  (American  nation,  vol.  16.) 
1906. 

Contains  references  to  Higginson. 

Harvard  graduates’  magazine,  Dec.,  1898.  Thomas  Went- 
worth Higginson,  LL.  D. 

Higginson.  Cheerful  yesterdays.  1898. 

How  I was  educated.  (In  Forum , Apr.,  1886.) 

Old  Cambridge.  1899. 

• The  first  chapter  contains  some  reminiscences  of  Higginson’s 
life. 

Jackson.  Col.  Higginson  and  his  ex-slave  regiment.  (In 
Christian  register , June  30,  1898.) 

Col.  Thomas  Wentworth  Higginson.  (In  New  Eng- 
land magazine , Dec.,  1901.) 

Lawton.  Introduction  to  the  study  of  American  literature. 
[1902.] 

Contains  numerous  references  to  Higginson. 

Thomas  Wentworth  Higginson,  author,  soldier,  and 

statesman  : events  in  his  life.  1889.  Pph. 

Mead.  Thomas  Wentworth  Higginson.  (In  New  England 
magazine , Deb.,  1900.  Editor’s  table.) 

Same.  Pph. 

Outlook,  Eeb.  6,  1904.  Thomas  Wentworth  Higginson. 

Portraits  (in  the  following)  : 

Appleton’s  cyclopaedia  of  American  biography,  vol.  3. 
1887. 

Bolton.  Famous  American  authors.  1887. 

Book  buyer,  May,  1892. 

Bookman,  Jan.,  1903. 

Critic,  Aug.,  1905. 

Duyckinck’s  cyclopaedia  of  American  literature,  vol.  2. 

i875- 

Eclectic  magazine,  May,  1877. 

Harper’s  weekly,  Apr.  8,  1905. 


38 


Higginson.  American  orators  and  oratory.  1901. 
Cheerful  yesterdays. 

[Writings.  Definitive  ed.]  Yols.  1,  3,  7.  1900. 

Independent,  Dec.  7,  1905. 

Lamb’s  biographical  dictionary  of  the  United  States, 
vol.  4.  1901. 

Lamp,  Mar.,  1903. 

National  cyclopedia  of  American  biography,  vol.  1.  1892. 

New  England  magazine,  Oct.,  1888;  Dec.,  1890  ; Mar., 
1891;  Aug.,  1899;  Dec.,  1901;  May,  1903;  June, 
1903. 

Outlook,  July  3,  1897  ; July  2,  1898  ; Eeb.  6,  1904;  Nov. 
24,  1906. 

Review  of  reviews  (American).  Dec.,  1900;  Mar.,  1904. 
Stedman  and  Hutchinson,  eds.  Library  of  American 
literature,  vol.  8.  1889. 

Warner’s  library  of  the  world’s  best  literature,  vol.  13. 
[1896-98.] 

Same.  Special  ed.  Vol. *18.  [1896-99.] 

World’s  parliament  of  religions,  vol.  1.  1893. 

Putnam.  Thomas  Wentworth  Higginson.  (In  Singers  and 
songs  of  the  liberal  faith . 1875*) 

Reid.  Eastern  authors  : Thomas  Wentworth  Higginson.  (In 
Literary  northwest , June,  1893.) 

Rhodes.  [Higginson’s  attitude  toward  fugitive  slave  law,  etc.] 
(In  History  of  the  United  States , vols.  1-2.  1893.) 

Rideing.  Thomas  Wentworth  Higginson.  (In  Boyhood  of 
famous  authors . [1897.] 

Sampson.  Short  letter  to  the  editor  about  Col.  Higginson. 

(In  Christian  register , July  14,  1898.) 

Scudder.  Biographical  sketch  of  Higginson.  (In  Higginson. 

Three  outdoor  papers.  Riverside  literature  series.)  Pph. 
Stevens.  [References  to  Higginson.]  (In  Anthony  Burns  : 
a history.) 

Strachey.  The  man  of  letters  as  reformer.  (In  Spectator , 
Mar.  29,  1902.) 


39 


Same.  (In  Living  age , May  io,  1902.) 

Time  and  the  hour,  May  29,  1897.  Famous  people  at  home: 

Thomas  Wentworth  Higginson. 

Twentieth  century  club.  Col.  Higginson’s  eightieth  birthday. 

(In  Christian  register  Dec.  24,  1903.) 

Washburne.  The  negro  soldier  in  Cuba  : a talk  with  Col. 
T.  W.  Higginson.  (In  New  England  home  magazine , 
supp.  to  Boston  Sunday  journal,  May  1,  1898.) 
Whiting.  [Col.  Higginson  as  presiding  officer  at  the  Author’s 
reading  in  commemoration  of  Longellow’s  81st  birth- 
day, at  Sanders  theatre,  1888.]  (In  Boston  days , 1902.) 

An  account  of  this  occasion  may  be  found  in  the  Cambridge 
chronicle  and  in  the  Cambridge  tribune,  Mar.  3,  1888. 
Wilson.  Hew  England  in  letters.  1904. 

Contains  numerous  references  to  Higginson. 

Winslow.  [Col.  Higginson.]  (In  Literary  Boston  of  to-day . 

Worcester  magazine,  Dec.,  1903.  Worcester  in  literature: 
Thomas  Wentworth  Higginson. 

Wright.  [Life  and  character  of  Col.  Higginson.]  (In  Cam- 
bridge tribune , May  26,  1906.) 

Reprinted  from  Human  life . 

Literary  Boston  of  to-day.  (In  National  magazine , 

Jan.  1900.) 

Additional  biographical  articles  may  be  found  in  the 
following  : 

Adams.  Dictionary  of  American  authors.  5th  ed.  1905. 
Allibone’s  dictionary  of  authors.  Supplement,  vol.  2.  1892. 

American  cyclopaedia,  vol.  8.  1881. 

American  men  of  science.  1906. 

Appleton’s  cyclopaedia  of  American  biography,  vol  3.  1887. 

Chambers’s  cyclopaedia  of  English  literature,  vol.  3.  1904. 

Chambers’s  encyclopaedia,  vol.  5.  [1897.] 


40 


Drake’s  dictionary  of  American  biography.  1876. 
Duyckinck’s  cyclopaedia  of  American  literature,  vol.  2.  [1875.] 
Encyclopedia  Americana,  vol.  8.  [1903.] 

Encyclopaedia  Britannica.  10th  ed.  Vol.  29. 

Lamb’s  biographical  dictionary  of  the  United  States,  vol.  4. 
1901. 

Men  and  women  of  the  time.  15th  ed.  1899. 

National  cyclopaedia  of  American  biography,  vol.  1.  1892. 

New  international  encyclopaedia,  vol.  9.  [1903.] 

Warner’s  library  of  the  world’s  best  literature,  vol.  13. 
[1896-1897.] 

Same.  Special  ed.,  vol.  18.  [1896-99.] 

Who’s  who  (English).  1906. 

Who’s  who  in  America.  1906-07. 

Ample  notices  of  Higginson  appear  also  in  the  latest  French,  Italian 
and  German  encyclopedias. 


INDEX  TO  CHRONOLOGICAL  LIST 


The  figures  in  the  margin  refer  to  the  year. 


Abington,  Aug.  i 1854 

Addresses,  speeches,  etc. : Ab- 
ington, Aug.  1,  1854;  Alli- 
ance between  Pilgrim  and 
Puritan,  1900;  Anti-liquor 
law,  1853;  Anti-slavery 
convention,  1853;  Boston 
mob  convention,  1855 ; John 
Bridge  statue,  1883;  Cam- 
bridge anniversary  oration, 

1881 ; Conference  of  liberal 
thinkers,  1878;  Constitu- 
tional convention,  1853; 
Decoration  day,  Mt.  Au- 
burn, 1870;  Decoration  day, 
Sanders  theatre,  1904;  Em- 
erson centenary,  1903;  For 
self-respect  and  self-protec- 
tion, 1887;  Free  religious 
association,  1875,  1900; 

Free  soilers  reunion,  1888; 
Freedom  club,  Worcester, 

1852 ; Frothingham  festival, 
N.Y.,  1879  > General  Grant’s 
funeral,  1885;  A history, 
1843;  Howe  memorial  ser- 
vice, 1876;  Immortality, 

Feb.  21,  1869;  Rev.  Samuel 
Johnson’s  funeral,  1882; 
King  Alfred’s  millenary, 
1902;  Legislative  temper- 
ance society,  1853;  Library 


convention,  Boston,  1879; 
Literature  as  a pursuit, 
1905;  Mass,  historical  so- 
ciety, 1891 ; Mass.  3d  con- 
gressional district,  1850; 
Merchants,  1851 ; New  Eng- 
land anti-slavery  conven- 
tion, 1855;  New  revolution, 
1857;  New  York  anti-slav- 
ery society,  1858;  Newbury- 
port  public  library,  1850; 
Spartanburg,  S.  C.,  1881; 
State  disunion  convention, 
1857;  West  Indian  conven- 
tion, 1856;  Woman  in 
Christian  civilization,  1858 ; 
Woman  suffrage,  1887; 
World’s  parliament  of  relig- 
ions, 1893;  Young  men’s 
library  association,  Worces- 
ter, 1852. 

African  proverbial  philoso- 


phy. 1854 

Aftermath  of  slavery . 1905 

Afternoon  landscape.  1889 

Alfred,  King.  1902 

Alliance  between  Pilgrim  and 
Puritan.  1900 

Am  I my  brother’s  keeper?  1853 
American  audiences.  1905 

American  flash  language  in 

1793.  1885 


42 


American  lecture  system.  1868 

American  literature  in  the 

nineteenth  century.  1903 

American  orators  and  oratory. 

1901 

American  sonnets.  1890 

Americanism  in  literature.  1870 

Anti-liquor  law.  1853 

Anti-slavery  colporteurage.  1855 

Anti-slavery  convention.  1853 

April  days.  1861 

Are  you  a Christian  ? 1873 

Aristocracy  of  the  dollar.  1904 

Army  life  in  a black  regi- 
ment. 1870 

Around  the  world  on  a bi- 
cycle. 1887 

Artist’s  dream.  1867 

Atlantic  essays.  1871 

Austin,  William.  1888 

Baby  of  the  regiment.  1874 

Baby  sorceress.  1882 

Barbarism  and  civilization.  1861 

Bequest  of  spiritualism.  1865 

Birthday  in  fairyland.  1850 

Book  and  heart.  1897 

Books  and  reading.  1894 

Books  unread.  1904 

Bookshelf  in  the  kitchen.  1896 
Boston  mob  convention.  1855 

Bridge,  John.  1883 

Brief  biographies  series.  1875 

British  yoke.  1883 

Brook  farm  period.  1882 

Brown,  John.  Life.  1887 

Yisit  to  Brown’s  household. 

i860 

Brown,  Charles  Brockden.  1898 

Browning,  Elizabeth  B.  1906 

Browning,  Kobert.  Biog.  of 

Browning’s  fame.  1897 

Memorial.  1890 


Bryan,  Keasons  for  voting  for. 

1900 


Buddha,  Character  of.  1872 

Buddhist  path  of  virtue.  1871 
Butterflies  and  poetry.  1904 
Cabot,  James  Elliot.  1903 

Cambridge.  Life  in  Cam- 
bridge town.  1896 

Literature.  1890 

Old  Cambridge.  1899 

Oration,  Dec.  28.  1881 

Cambridge  public  library, 

Letter  relating  to.  1890 

Plan  for  the  library.  1890 

Reports.  1893,  1894,  1898, 

1899,  1901 

Carlyle’s  laugh.  1881 

Channing,  William  Ellery.  1902 
Charge  with  Prince  Rupert.  1859 
Charles  river  railroad  testi- 
mony. 1882 

Cheerful  yesterdays.  1896-1898 
Child,  Mrs.  Lydia  Maria. 

Letters.  1843 

Sketch  (Eminent  women).  1868 
Childe  Roland.  1901 

Childhood’s  fancies.  1876 

Children,  Sermons  to.  1853 

Children’s  books  of  the  year.  1866 
Cleveland  convention.  1857 

Close  of  the  Victorian  epoch. 

x9°5 

Cobbe,  Frances  Power.  1865 
Coffin,  Levi.  1880 

Common-sense  about  women. 

1881 

Concerning  all  of  us.  1892 

Conference  of  liberal  thinkers. 


1878 

Conscience  in  the  counting 


room.  1853 

Constitutional  convention, 

qualification  of  voters.  1853 

Contemporaries.  1899 

Cook,  Joseph.  1879 

Cooper,  James  Fenimore.  1898 


43 


Country  homes  of  famous 

Americans  1905 

Cowardice  of  culture.  1905 

Cowpens,  Battle  of.  1881 

Cradle  song.  1846 

Creative  spirit  in  literature.  1906 
Dana,  Bichard  Henry.  1890 

Dawning  of  independence.  1883 
Day  in  Carter  notch.  1853 

Day  of  Scottish  games.  1872 

December.  1853 

Declaration  of  independence. 

1876 

Decoration.  1874 

Decoration  day,  Mt.  Auburn. 

1870 

Decoration  day,  Sanders 

theatre.  1904 

Dickens,  Child  pictures  from. 

1868 

Dickinson,  Emily.  Letters.  1891 
Poems.  1890,  1891 

Does  slavery  Christianize  the 

negro?  1854 

Driftwood  fire.  1867 

Dwelling-places.  1880 

Education  and  the  public 

library.  1900 

Educational  conditions  and 

problems.  1897 

Egyptian  banquet.  1892 

Elegy  without  fiction.  1852 

Elizabethan  verse.  1906 

Emerson,  Balph  Waldo.  Cen- 
tenary. 1903 

Conway’s  Emerson  at  home 
and  abroad.  1883 

Emerson.  1875 

Introduction.  1902 

England,  Road  to.  1899 

English  and  American  cous- 
ins. 1904 

English  and  American  man- 
ners. 1888 


English  history  for  American 

readers.  189  3,  1898 

English  in  America,  Second 

generation  of.  1883 

English  literature  in  the  last 

half  of  the  19th  century.  1905 

English  nation.  1883 

English  sources  of  American 

dialect.  1888 

English  statesmen.  1875 

Epictetus.  1865 

Fair  play  the  best  policy.  1865 

Fairy  coursers.  1895 

Fayal  and  the  Portuguese.  i860 

First  Americans.  1882 

Footpaths.  1870 

For  self-respect  and  self-pro- 
tection. 1887 

Forward.  1852 

Free  religious  association. 

1875,  I900 

Free  soilers  reunion.  1888 

Freedom  club,  Worcester.  1852 

French  and  Indian  wars.  1880 

French  radical  eloquence.  1881 

French  voyageurs.  1883 

Frothingham,  Octavius 

Brooks.  1896 

Frothingham  festival,  N.Y.  1879 

Fugitives’  hymn.  1848 

Gabriel’s  defeat.  1862 

Galatea  collection.  1896 

Garrison,  William  Lloyd.  1886 

Sonnet  to.  1846 

Two  anti-slavery  leaders.  1880 

“Gentlemen  by  profession.”  1906 

Glimpses  of  authors.  1891 

Going  to  Mt.  Katahdin.  1856 

Gottingen  and  Harvard  eighty 

years  ago.  1897 

Grant,  Ulysses  S.  1886 

Memorial  services.  1885 

Greek  goddesses.  1869 


44 


Gymnasium  and  gymnastics 


in  Harvard  college.  1875 

Gymnastics.  1861 

H.  H.  See  Jackson,  Helen. 
Hamerton  on  literature  in  a 

republic.  1886,  1887 

Harris,  Thaddeus  William.  1869 
Hartford  Bible  convention.  1854 
Harvard  memorial  biogra- 
phies. 1866 

Haunted  window.  1867 

Hawes,  Charlotte  P.  1867 

Hawthorne,  Nathaniel.  Cen- 
tenary. 1905 

Hawthorne’s  Nathaniel 
Hawthorne  and  his  wife.  1885 
Last  bequest.  1872 

Precursor  of.  1888 

Hawthorne,  Mrs.,  An  evening 
with.  1871 

Hayne,  Paul  Hamilton.  1887 

Health  of  our  girls.  1862 

Heath  readers.  1903 

Hebe.  1846 

Higginson,  Francis.  1891 

Higginson  family.  1892 

Higher  education  of  woman.  1873 
Hints  on  writing  and  speech 

making.  1887 

His  brother’s  brother.  1899 

History,  A.  1843 

History  in  easy  lessons.  1905 

Hoar,  George  Frisbie.  1905 

Holiness  unto  the  Lord.  1846 

Holm,  Saxe.  1878 

Holmes,  John.  1899 

How  I was  educated.  1886 

How  should  a colored  man 

vote  in  1900?  1900 

How  the  American  revolution 

opened.  1874 

Howto  read  magazines.  1894 

How  to  use  a public  library.  1894 


Howe,  Samuel  Gridley.  1876 
Howells,  William  Dean.  Mod- 
ern Italian  poets.  1888 

Undiscovered  country.  1880 

Hundred  years’  war.  1883 

Hymn  of  humanity.  1846 

Hymns.  1846,  1847 

Immortality.  1869 

In  a fair  country.  1890 

In  a wherry.  1872 

Intensely  human.  1904 

Intercollegiate  literary  asso- 
ciation. 1877,  1879 

Intercollegiate  scholarships.  1873 
Irish  heart.  1878 

Jackson,  Helen.  1885 

Reminiscences ; To  the 
memory  of.  1886 

Verses.  1871 

Jacksonville  in  1863.  1900 

Johnson,  Rev.  Samuel.  1882 

Ride  through  Kanzas.  1856 

Keats  ms.  1896 

Lanier,  Sidney.  1887 

Lay  of  the  humble.  1845 

Leaves  from  an  officer’s 
journal.  1864,  1865 

Letter  to  a dyspeptic.  1859 


Letter  to  a young  contributor. 


1862 

Letters  of  mark.  1905 

Letters  to  country  boys.  1869 

Library  convention,  Boston.  1879 
Licentiousness.  1846 

Life  of  birds.  1862 

Literary  London  twenty  years 

ago.  1897 

Literary  Paris  twenty  years 

ago.  1898 

Literature  as  a pursuit.  1905 

Literature  as  an  art.  1867 

Lodge’s  Webster.  1883 

Longfellow,  Henry  Wads- 
worth. 1902 


45 


Lovers.  1853 

Lowell,  James  Bussell. 
Among  my  books.  1876 

Loyal  legion  tribute.  1892 

Lowell  in  Cambridge.  1889 

Lowell  in  England.  1885 

Lowell  scrap-book.  1896 

Lowell  institute  lectures, 

Boston.  1903,  I9°5 

Madam  Delia’s  expectations.  1871 
Mademoiselle’s  campaigns.  1858 

Madonna  di  San  Sisto.  1843 

Maibone.  1869 

Man  and  nature.  1852 

Maroons  of  Jamaica.  i860 

Maroons  of  Surinam.  i860 

Mass,  historical  society.  1891 

Mass,  in  mourning.  1854 

Mass,  in  the  army  and  navy. 

1895,  i896 

Mass.  3d  congressional  dis- 
trict. 1850 

Memorial  ode.  1881 

Merchants.  1851 

Missent  letter.  1887 

Monarch  of  dreams.  1886 

Moonglade.  1876 

Moral  results  of  slavery.  1853 

Murder  of  the  innocents.  1859 

My  outdoor  study.  1861 

Nebraska  bill.  1854 

Negro  race  in  America.  1883 

Negro  spirituals.  1867 

New  counterblast.  1861 

New  England  anti-slavery 

convention.  1855 

New  England  life.  1879 

New  revolution.  1857 

New  world  and  the  new  book. 

1892 

New  York  anti-slavery  so- 
ciety. 1858 

Newbury  school  committee.  1851 


Newburyport  free  evening 


school.  1851 

Newburyport  public  library.  1850 
Newport  free  public  library. 

1867,  1868 

Newport  public  schools.  1876 

Night  in  the  water.  1864 

Nils’s  garden.  1889 

Nonsense  of  it.  1867 

November.  1853 

Ode  to  a butterfly.  1889 

Odensee.  1853 

Old  Cambridge.  1899 

Old  Dutch  times  in  New  Y^ork. 

1874 

Old  English  seamen.  1883 

Old  Latin  textbook.  1871 

Old  Salem  sea-captains.  1886 

Oldport  days.  1873 

Oldport  in  winter.  1867 

Oldport  wharves.  1868 

On  the  outskirts  of  public 

life.  1898 

On  the  steps  of  the  hall.  1891 

Ordeal  by  battle.  1861 

Ossoli,  Margaret  Fuller. 

Life.  1884 

Sketch.  (Eminent  women).  1868 
Other  side  of  the  woman 

question.  1879 

Our  future  militia  system.  1865 
Our  menagerie.  1870 

Out  on  picket.  1867 

Outdoor  papers.  1863 

Palmer’s  Odyssey.  1884 

Parker,  Theodore.  i860 

Unpublished  letters  from.  1871 
Parker  library  report.  1883 

Parliament  of  religions, 

World’s.  1893 

Part  of  a man’s  life.  1905 

Pedigree  of  liberalism.  1868 

Peirce,  Benjamin.  1881 


46 


Petrarch,  Fifteen  sonnets 


from.  1903 

Philanthropy,  The  word.  1875 

Phillips,  Wendell.  1884,  1899 
Physical  and  intellectual 

habits.  1878 

Physical  courage.  1858 

Plea  for  culture.  1867 

Pleiades,  Search  for  the.  1880 

Plutarch’s  morals.  1871 

Portugal’s  glory  and  decay.  1856 

Procession  of  the  flowers. 

1862,  1897 

Puritan  minister.  1863 

Rabiah’s  defense.  1891 

Railroad,  The.  1846 

Rationale  of  spiritualism.  1859 

Reader’s  history  of  American 

literature.  1903 

Recent  essays.  1879 

Reed  immortal.  1880 

Regular  and  volunteer 

officers.  1864 

Results  of  spiritualism.  1859 

Reunited  Anglo-Saxon dom.  1906 

Revolutionary  congressman 

on  horseback.  1880 

Rhode  Island.  Education.  1877 

Public  school  system.  1876 

Rindge  gifts  to  Cambridge.  1891 

Road  to  England.  1899 

Rolfe,  William  James.  1905 

Romance  of  a brown-paper 

parcel.  1896 

Romance  of  history.  1858 

Rupert,  Prince.  1859 

Russell,  William  E.  1894 

Saints  and  their  bodies.  1858 

Sappho.  1871 

Save  the  republic.  1899 

School,  college,  library.  1892 

School  of  jingoes.  1896 

Scripture  idolatry.  1854 

Scudder,  Horace  Elisha.  1902 


Second  generation  of  English 
in  America.  1883 

Sellar’s  Homan  poets  of  re- 
public. 1881 

Sermons : Am  I my  brother’s 
keeper?  1853;  Elegy 
without  fiction,  1852; 
Mass,  in  mourning,  1854; 
Ordination  exercises, 
Sept.  15,  1847;  Nebraska 
bill,  1854;  Scripture  idol- 
atry, 1854;  Sermons  to 
children,  1853;  Thanks- 
giving sermon , 1 848 ; 
Things  newand  old,  1852  ; 

To  a young  convert,  1851 ; 

The  tongue,  1850;  Uni- 
tarian autumnal  conven- 
tion, 1853. 

Shadow.  1870 

Short  march  with  the  guard.  1881 
Short  stories  for  short  people. 

1896 

Short  studies  of  American 


authors.  187  9,  1888 

Sleeping  car.  1892 

Snow.  1862 

Some  war  scenes  revisited.  1878 

Spanish  discoverers.  1882 

Spartanburg,  S.  C.  1881 

Spencer,  Herbert.  1865 

Spiritual  manifestations.  1857 

State  disunion  convention.  1857 

Story  of  the  signing.  1876 

Story  without  an  end.  1902 

Stowe,  Harriet  Beecher.  1899 

Straight  lines  or  oblique 

lines?  1893 

Sub  pondere  crescit.  1887 

Such  as  they  are.  1893 

Sunny  side  of  the  transcen- 
dental period.  1904 

Sunshine  and  Petrarch.  1867 

Swimming.  1870 


47 


Sympathy  of  religions.  1871 

Tales  of  the  enchanted  islands 

of  the  Atlantic.  1898 

Temperance  convention, 

Whole  world’s.  1853 

Temperance  society,  Legisla- 
tive. 1853 

Thalatta.  1853 

Thanksgiving  sermon.  1848 

Therese , Mine.  1869 

Things  new  and  old.  1852 

Thoreau,  Henry  David.  1898 

Three  outdoor  papers.  1889 

To  a young  convert.  1851 

Tongue,  The.  1850 

Transcendental  period.  1904 

Travellers  and  outlaws.  1889 

Turner,  Nat.  1861 

Two  anti-slavery  leaders.  1880 

Two  lessons.  1891 

Twofold  being.  1849 

Tyrtaeus.  1845 

Unitarian  autumnal  conven- 
tion. 1853 

United  States.  History  (with 

MacDonald).  1905 

Larger  history.  1885 

Young  folks’ history.  1875,1882 
Young  folks’  history  for  the 
blind.  1881 

Civil  war.  Mass,  regiments. 

1892 

Unsolved  problems  in  woman 
suffrage.  1887 

Up  the  Edisto.  1867 

Up  the  St.  John’s.  1865 

Up  the  St.  Mary’s.  1865 

Yesey,  Denmark.  1861 

Yestis  angelica.  1889 

Yikings,  Yisit  of  the.  1882 

Warner,  Charles  Dudley.  1874 

Waterlilies.  1858 

West  Indian  convention.  1856 

Western  Reserve  university 
lectures.  1901 


Whipple,  Edwin  Percy.  1886 

White,  Richard  Grant.  1878 

Whittier,  John  Greenleaf.  1902 

Whole  world’s  temperance 
convention.  1853 

Why  do  children  dislike  his- 
tory ? 1883 

Winthrop  to  Philip’s  war.  1880 

Woman  : Common  - sense 

about  women.  1881 

Other  side  of  the  woman 
question.  1879 

Unsolved  problems  in 
woman  suffrage.  1887 

Woman  and  her  wishes.  1854 

Woman  and  the  alphabet.  1859 
Woman  in  Christian  civili- 
zation. 1858 

Woman  suffrage.  1887 

Woman’s  rights  almanac.  1858 
Woman  who  most  influ- 
enced me.  1895 

Women  and  men.  1887 

Worcester  public  library  re- 
port. 1862 

Worcester  school  committee 

report.  1855 

Word  of  hope.  1846 

Wordsworthshire.  1905 

World  literature.  1890 

World  outside  of  science.  1892 

World’s  parliament  of  relig- 
ions. 1893 

Writings.  Definitive  ed.  1900 

Young  folks’  book  of  Ameri- 
can explorers.  1877 

Young  folks’  history  of  the 

U.  S.  1875,  1882 

For  the  blind.  1881 

Young  girl’s  library.  1895 

Young  men’s  library  associa- 
tion, Worcester.  1852 

Young  men’s  party.  1884 

Youth  and  literary  life.  1892 


